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AYA testis cancer: The unmet challenge.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

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Authors

Thomas, Benjamin 
Williamson, Max 
Sweeney, Christopher 

Abstract

Testis cancer is considered a rare-incidence cancer but comprises the third most common cancer diagnosed within the adolescent and young adult (AYA) years (15-39 years). Most testis cancer patients can anticipate a survival outcome in excess of 95%. However, there are subgroups of AYA patients where outcomes are considerably worse, including younger adolescents, patients with certain histological subtypes, or from certain ethnic backgrounds. For those cured with chemotherapy, the toxicity of treatment and burden of late effects is significant. Newer germ cell tumor-specific biomarkers may identify patients who do not require further treatment interventions or may detect early recurrence, potentially reducing the burden of treatment required for cure. An international collaboration for this rare tumor is creating the forum for trial design, where these biomarker research questions are embedded. Going forward, AYA testis cancer patients could benefit from having a more personalized treatment plan, tailored to risk, that minimizes the overall burden of late effects.

Description

Keywords

germ cell, germ cell tumors, late effects of cancer treatment, molecular biology, psychosocial, quality of life, tumor biology, tumors, Adolescent, Humans, Male, Needs Assessment, Testicular Neoplasms, Young Adult

Journal Title

Pediatr Blood Cancer

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1545-5009
1545-5017

Volume Title

66

Publisher

Wiley

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
St Baldrick's Foundation (via Dana-Farber Cancer Institute) (2015-0743)
St Baldricks Foundation